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Trans-peritoneal vs. retroperitoneal robotic assisted partial nephrectomy in posterior renal tumours: need for a risk-stratified patient individualised approach. A systematic review and meta-analysis

Trans-peritoneal vs. retroperitoneal robotic assisted partial nephrectomy in posterior renal tumours: need for a risk-stratified patient individualised approach. A systematic review and meta-analysis
Trans-peritoneal vs. retroperitoneal robotic assisted partial nephrectomy in posterior renal tumours: need for a risk-stratified patient individualised approach. A systematic review and meta-analysis

To systematically review world literature and compare peri-operative outcome including operating time (OT), estimated blood loss (EBL), warm ischemia time (WIT), length of stay (LOS) and complications between retroperitoneal robotic assisted partial nephrectomy (RP-RAPN) and trans-peritoneal robotic assisted partial nephrectomy (TP-RAPN) for posteriorly located renal masses. All randomised trials and observational studies comparing RP-RAPN and TP-RAPN for posteriorly located renal masses were considered. The GRADE approach (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation, GRADE) was used to rate the quality of evidence. 82 potential publications were identified. 3 were included in the review. All three studies were observational comparative studies. 347 and 550 patients underwent RP-RAPN and TP-RAPN, respectively, for posteriorly located tumours. There was statistically significant difference in LOS between the 2 techniques, favouring the RP-RAPN cohort: risk ratio (M-H, random, 95% CI), - 0.42 [- 0.67, - 0.18], p < 0.0006. There was no statistically significant difference in overall complication rates between the two techniques: risk ratio (M-H, fixed, 95% CI), 0.80 [0.49, 1.30], p = 0.37. There was no statistically significant difference in ≥ Clavien 3a complication rates between the two t echniques: risk ratio (M-H, fixed, 95% CI), 1.17 [0.62, 2.19], p = 0.63. OT, EBL, WIT and positive margin rates were similar for both approaches. The quality of evidence for complications, LOS and remaining outcomes were 'moderate', 'low' and 'very low', respectively, on GRADE approach. The current review suggests that the LOS with RP-RAPN are significantly lesser than TP-RAPN for posterior tumours. The RP-RAPN does not appear to offer any advantage over TP-RAPN for other peri-operative outcomes such as WIT, OT and EBL. The surgical margin rates and morbidity between the two approaches appear to be similar.

1863-2483
McLean, Andrew
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Mukherjee, Ankur
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Phukan, Chandan
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Veeratterapillay, Rajan
44b90a1f-c951-4a1b-9604-189cea4140ea
Soomro, Naeem
c137f9f4-add2-45bf-9987-7812e156a1b9
Somani, Bhaskar
ab5fd1ce-02df-4b88-b25e-8ece396335d9
Rai, Bhavan Prasad
e1156207-bfd1-4f89-b0aa-9e55fc54235b
McLean, Andrew
df70e3dc-fbc6-4751-9288-5f7c67794503
Mukherjee, Ankur
7113c1cf-c763-4975-a844-3b133d26c923
Phukan, Chandan
c97533d0-9f8f-4789-ac61-d5f9c2ed6e2c
Veeratterapillay, Rajan
44b90a1f-c951-4a1b-9604-189cea4140ea
Soomro, Naeem
c137f9f4-add2-45bf-9987-7812e156a1b9
Somani, Bhaskar
ab5fd1ce-02df-4b88-b25e-8ece396335d9
Rai, Bhavan Prasad
e1156207-bfd1-4f89-b0aa-9e55fc54235b

McLean, Andrew, Mukherjee, Ankur, Phukan, Chandan, Veeratterapillay, Rajan, Soomro, Naeem, Somani, Bhaskar and Rai, Bhavan Prasad (2019) Trans-peritoneal vs. retroperitoneal robotic assisted partial nephrectomy in posterior renal tumours: need for a risk-stratified patient individualised approach. A systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Robotic Surgery. (doi:10.1007/s11701-019-00973-8).

Record type: Review

Abstract

To systematically review world literature and compare peri-operative outcome including operating time (OT), estimated blood loss (EBL), warm ischemia time (WIT), length of stay (LOS) and complications between retroperitoneal robotic assisted partial nephrectomy (RP-RAPN) and trans-peritoneal robotic assisted partial nephrectomy (TP-RAPN) for posteriorly located renal masses. All randomised trials and observational studies comparing RP-RAPN and TP-RAPN for posteriorly located renal masses were considered. The GRADE approach (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation, GRADE) was used to rate the quality of evidence. 82 potential publications were identified. 3 were included in the review. All three studies were observational comparative studies. 347 and 550 patients underwent RP-RAPN and TP-RAPN, respectively, for posteriorly located tumours. There was statistically significant difference in LOS between the 2 techniques, favouring the RP-RAPN cohort: risk ratio (M-H, random, 95% CI), - 0.42 [- 0.67, - 0.18], p < 0.0006. There was no statistically significant difference in overall complication rates between the two techniques: risk ratio (M-H, fixed, 95% CI), 0.80 [0.49, 1.30], p = 0.37. There was no statistically significant difference in ≥ Clavien 3a complication rates between the two t echniques: risk ratio (M-H, fixed, 95% CI), 1.17 [0.62, 2.19], p = 0.63. OT, EBL, WIT and positive margin rates were similar for both approaches. The quality of evidence for complications, LOS and remaining outcomes were 'moderate', 'low' and 'very low', respectively, on GRADE approach. The current review suggests that the LOS with RP-RAPN are significantly lesser than TP-RAPN for posterior tumours. The RP-RAPN does not appear to offer any advantage over TP-RAPN for other peri-operative outcomes such as WIT, OT and EBL. The surgical margin rates and morbidity between the two approaches appear to be similar.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 14 May 2019

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Local EPrints ID: 433341
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/433341
ISSN: 1863-2483
PURE UUID: 0dc0ebbd-3488-4b5c-96c6-28d38065fe85

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Date deposited: 14 Aug 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:23

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Contributors

Author: Andrew McLean
Author: Ankur Mukherjee
Author: Chandan Phukan
Author: Rajan Veeratterapillay
Author: Naeem Soomro
Author: Bhaskar Somani
Author: Bhavan Prasad Rai

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